Browse Al Islam

The Holy Prophet Muhammad in the Eyes of Non-Muslims

Zia Shah

Truth About Ahmadiyyat

To give an unbiased yet positive account of his character to the readers, in this section, I intend to quote some of the writings of Non-Muslim writers to illustrate how he appeared in the eyes of some of the Non-Muslim writers.

PRINGLE KENNEDY

Pringle Kennedy has observed (Arabian Society at the Time of Muhammad, pp.8, 10, 18, 21):

Muhammad was, to use a striking expression, the man of the hour. In
order to understand his wonderful success, one must study the conditions
of his times. Five and half centuries and more had elapsed when he was
born since Jesus had come into the world. At that time, the old religions
of Greece and Rome, and of the hundred and one states along the Mediterranean,
had lost their vitality. In their place, Caesarism had come as a living
cult. The worship of the state as personified by the reigning Caesar, such
was the religion of the Roman Empire. Other religions might exist, it was
true; but they had to permit this new cult by the side of them and predominant
over them. But Caesarism failed to satisfy. The Eastern religions and superstitions
(Egyptian, Syrian, Persian) appealed to many in the Roman world and found
numerous votaries. The fatal fault of many of these creeds was that in
many respects they were so ignoble ...

When Christianity conquered Caesarism at the commencement of the fourth
century, it, in its turn, became Caesarised. No longer was it the pure
creed which had been taught some three centuries before. It had become
largely de spiritualised, ritualised, materialised .......

How, in a few years, all this was changed, how, by 650 AD a great part
of this world became a different world from what it had been before, is
one of the most remarkable chapters in human history .... This wonderful
change followed, if it was not mainly caused by, the life of one man, the
Prophet of Mecca ....

Whatever the opinion one may have of this extraordinary man, whether
it be that of the devout Muslim who considers him the last and greatest
herald of God's word, or of the fanatical Christian of former days, who
considered him an emissary of the Evil One, or of certain modern Orientalists,
who look on him rather as a politician than a saint, as an organiser of
Asia in general and Arabia in particular, against Europe, rather than as
a religious reformer; there can be no difference as to the immensity of
the effect which his life has had on the history of the world.

To those of us, to whom the man is everything, the milieu but little,
he is the supreme instance of what can be done by one man. Even others,
who hold that the conditions of time and place, the surroundings of every
sort, the capacity of receptivity of the human mind, have, more than an
individual effort, brought about the great steps in the world's history,
cannot well deny, that even if this step were to come, without Muhammad,
it would have been indefinitely delayed.

MICHAEL H HART

He in his book The 100 has ranked the great men in history with
respect to their influence on human history. He ranked the Holy Prophet
Muhammmadsaw as the most influential man in the human history. He wrote the
following about the Holy Prophet Muhammadsaw.
The text has been quoted in
its entirety, however in the few places where I differed strongly with his
opinion, I have taken the liberty to insert my humble opinion within parenthesis
to caution the reader.

My choice of Muhammad to lead the list of the world's most influential
persons may surprise some readers and may be questioned by others, but
he was the only man in history who was supremely successful on both the
religious and secular levels.

Of humble origins, Muhammad founded and promulgated one of the world's
great religions, and became an immensely effective political leader. Today,
thirteen centuries after his death, his influence is still powerful and
pervasive.

The majority of the persons in this book had the advantage of being
born and raised in centers of civilization, highly cultured or politically
pivotal nations. Muhammad, however, was born in the year 570, in the city
of Makkah, in southern Arabia, at that time a backward area of the world,
far from the centers of trade, art, and learning. Orphaned at age six,
he was reared in modest surroundings. Islamic tradition tells us that he
was illiterate. His economic position improved when, at age twenty five,
he married a wealthy widow. Nevertheless, as he approached forty, there
was little outward indication that he was a remarkable person.

Most Arabs at that time were pagans, who believed in many gods. There
were, however, in Makkah, a small number of Jews and Christians; it was
from them no doubt that Muhammad first learned of a single, omnipotent
God who ruled the entire universe. When he was forty years old, Muhammad
became convinced that this one true God (Allah) was speaking to him, and
had chosen him to spread the true faith.

For three years, Muhammad preached only to close friends and associates.
Then, about 613, he began preaching in public. As he slowly gained converts,
the Makkahn authorities came to consider him a dangerous nuisance. In 622,
fearing for his safety, Muhammad fled to Madinah (a city some 200 miles
north of Makkah), where he had been offered a position of considerable
political power. This flight, called the Higra, was the turning point of
the Prophet's life. In Makkah, he had had few followers. In Madinah, he
had many more, and he soon acquired an influence that made him a virtual
dictator. During the next few years, while Muhammad's following grew rapidly,
a series of battles were fought between Madinah and Makkah. This war ended
in 630 with Muhammad's triumphant return to Makkah as conqueror. The remaining
two and one half years of his life witnessed the rapid conversion of the
Arab tribes to the new religion. When Muhammad died, in 632, he was the
effective ruler of all of southern Arabia.

The Bedouin tribesmen of Arabia had a reputation as fierce warriors.
But their number was small; and plagued by disunity and internecine warfare,
they had been no match for the larger armies of the kingdoms in the settled
agricultural areas to the north. However, unified by Muhammad for the first
time in history, and inspired by their fervent belief in the one true God,
these small Arab armies now embarked upon one of the most astonishing series
of conquests in human history. (However, one should note that these were
not offencive wars, limitation of time and space will not allow us to dwell
onto a detailed analysis of these wars and conquests). To the northeast
of Arabia lay the large Neo Persian Empire of the Sassanids; to the northwest
lay the Byzantine, or Eastern Roman Empire, centered in Constantinople.
Numerically, the Arabs were no match for their opponents. On the field
of battle, though, the inspired Arabs rapidly conquered all of Mesopotamia,
Syria, and Palestine. By 642, Egypt had been wrested from the Byzantine
Empire, while the Persian armies had been crushed at the key battles of
Qadisiya in 637, and Nehavend in 642.

But even these enormous conquests -- which were made under the leadership
of Muhammad's close friends and immediate successors, Abu Bakr and 'Umar
ibn al Khattab did not mark the end of the Arab advance. By 711, the Arab
armies had swept completely across North Africa to the Atlantic Ocean.
There they turned north and, crossing the Strait of Gibraltar, overwhelmed
the Visigothic kingdom in Spain. For a while, it must have seemed that
the Muslims would overwhelm all of Christian Europe. However, in 732, at
the famous Battle of Tours, a Muslim army, which had advanced into the
center of France, was at last defeated by the Franks. Nevertheless, in
a scant century of fighting, these Bedouin tribesmen, inspired by the word
of the Prophet, had carved out an empire stretching from the borders of
India to the Atlantic Ocean -- the largest empire that the world had yet
seen. And everywhere that the armies conquered, large scale conversion
to the new faith eventually followed.

Now, not all of these conquests proved permanent. The Persians, though
they have remained faithful to the religion of the Prophet, have since
regained their independence from the Arabs. And in Spain, more than seven
centuries of warfare finally resulted in the Christians reconquering the
entire peninsula. However, Mesopotamia and Egypt, the two cradles of ancient
civilization, have remained Arab, as has the entire coast of North Africa.
The new religion, of course, continued to spread, in the intervening centuries,
far beyond the borders of the original Muslim conquests. Currently, it
has tens of millions of adherents in Africa and Central Asia, and even
more in Pakistan and northern India, and in Indonesia. In Indonesia, the
new faith has been a unifying factor. In the Indian subcontinent, however,
the conflict between Muslims and Hindus is still a major obstacle to unity.

How, then, is one to assess the overall impact of Muhammad on human
history? Like all religions, Islam exerts an enormous influence upon the
lives of its followers. It is for this reason that the founders of the
world's great religions all figure prominently in this book. Since there
are roughly twice as many Christians as Muslims in the world, it may initially
seem strange that Muhammad has been ranked higher than Jesus. There are
two principal reasons for that decision First, Muhammad played a far more
important role in the development of Islam than Jesus did in the development
of Christianity. Although Jesus was responsible for the main ethical and
moral precepts of Christianity (insofar as these differed from Judaism),
St. Paul was the main developer of Christian theology, its principal proselytizer,
and the author of a large portion of the New Testament.

Muhammad, however, was responsible for both the theology of Islam and
its main ethical and moral principles. In addition, he played the key role
in proselytizing the new faith, and in establishing the religious practices
of lslam. Moreover, he is the author of the Muslim holy scriptures, the
Quran, (however, the Muslims believe and try to prove that it is the literal
word of God), a collection of certain of Muhammad's insights that he believed
had been directly revealed to him by Allah. Most of these utterances were
copied more or less faithfully during Muhammad's lifetime and were collected
together in authoritative form not long after his death. The Quran, therefore,
closely represents Muhammad's ideas and teachings and to a considerable
extent his exact words. No such detailed compilation of the teachings of
Christ has survived. Since the Quran is at least as important to Muslims
as the Bible is to Christians, the influence of Muhammad through the medium
of the Quran has been enormous. It is probable that the relative influence
of Muhammad on Islam has been larger than the combined influence of Jesus
Christ and St. Paul on Christianity. On the purely religious level, then,
it seems likely that Muhammad has been as influential in human history
as Jesus.

Furthermore, Muhammad (unlike Jesus) was a secular as well as a religious
leader. In fact, as the driving force behind the Arab conquests, he may
well rank as the most influential political leader of all time.

Of many important historical events, one might say that they were inevitable
and would have occurred even without the particular political leader who
guided them. For example, the South American colonies would probably have
won their independence from Spain even if Simon Bolivar had never lived.
But this cannot be said of the Arab conquests. Nothing similar had occurred
before Muhammad, and there is no reason to believe that the conquests would
have been achieved without him. The only comparable conquests in human
history are those of the Mongols in the thirteenth century, which were
primarily due to the influence of Genghis Khan. These conquests, however,
though more extensive than those of the Arabs, did not prove permanent,
and today the only areas occupied by the Mongols are those that they held
prior to the time of Genghis Khan.

It is far different with the conquests of the Arabs. From Iraq to Morocco,
there extends a whole chain of Arab nations united not merely by their
faith in Islam, but also by their Arabic language, history, and culture.
The centrality of the Quran in the Muslim religion and the fact that it
is written in Arabic have probably prevented the Arab language from breaking
up into mutually unintelligible dialects, which might otherwise have occurred
in the intervening thirteen centuries. Differences and divisions between
these Arab states exist, of course, and they are considerable, but the
partial disunity should not blind us to the important elements of unity
that have continued to exist. For instance, neither Iran nor Indonesia,
both oil producing states and both Islamic in religion, joined in the oil
embargo of the winter of 1973 74. It is no coincidence that all of the
Arab states, and only the Arab states, participated in the embargo.

We see, then, that the Arab conquests of the seventh century have continued
to play an important role in human history, down to the present day. It
is this unparalleled combination of secular and religious influence which
I feel entitles Muhammad to be considered the most influential single figure
in human history.

SIR THOMAS CARLYLE

Talking about the fact that Hadhrat Muhammadsaw
was illiterate he writes:

One other circumstance we must not forget: that he had no school learning;
of the thing we call school-learning none at all. The art of writing was
but just introduced into Arabia; it seems to be the true opinion that Muhammad
never could write! Life in the Desert, with its experiences, was all his
education. What of this infinite Universe he, from his dim place, with
his own eyes and thoughts, could take in, so much and no more of it was
he to know. Curious, if we will reflect on it, this of having no books.
Except by what he could see for himself, or hear of by uncertain rumour
of speech in the obscure Arabian Desert, he could know nothing. The wisdom
that had been before him or at a distance from him in the world, was in
a manner as good as not there for him. Of the great brother souls, flame
beacons through so many lands and times, no one directly communicates with
this great soul. He is alone there, deep down in the bosom of the Wilderness;
has to grow up so, -- alone with Nature and his own Thoughts.

Talking about his marriage he writes:

How he was placed with Kadijah, a rich Widow, as her steward, and travelled
in her business, again to the Fairs of Syria; how he managed all, as one
can well understand, with fidelity and adroitness; how her gratitude, her
regard for him grew: the story of their marriage is altogether a graceful
intelligible one, as told us by the Arab authors. He was twenty five; she
forty, though still beautiful. He seems to have lived in a most affectionate,
peaceable, wholesome way with this wedded benefactress; loving her truly,
and her alone. It goes greatly against the impostor theory, the fact that
he lived in this entirely unexceptionable, entirely quiet and commonplace
way, till the heat of his years was done.

J. H. DENISON

J. H. Denison writes in his book, Emotions as the Basis of Civilisation,
pp. 265 9:

In the fifth and sixth centuries, the civilised world stood on the verge
of chaos. The old emotional cultures that had made civilisation possible,
since they had given to man a sense of unity and of reverence for their
rulers, had broken down, and nothing had been found adequate to take their
place. ..... It seemed then that the great civilisation which had taken
four thousand years to construct was on the verge of disintegration, and
that mankind was likely to return to that condition of barbarism where
every tribe and sect was against the next, and law and order were unknown
....... The new sanctions created by Christianity were creating divisions
and destruction instead of unity and order .... Civilisation like a gigantic
tree whose foliage had over reached the world ..... stood tottering .....
rotted to the core .... Was there any emotional culture that could be brought
in to gather mankind once more to unity and to save civilisation? ... It
was among the Arabs that the man was born who was to unite the whole known
world of the east and south.

If the object of religion be the inculcation of morals, the diminution
of evil, the promotion of human happiness, the expansion of the human intellect,
if the performance of good works will avail in the great day when mankind
shall be summoned to its final reckoning it is neither irreverent nor unreasonable
to admit that Muhammad was indeed an Apostle of God.

LAMARTINE

Lamartine a French historian, writes in his book, History of Turkey,
p. 276:

Philosopher, orator, apostle, legislator, warrior, conqueror of ideas,
restorer of rational dogmas, the founder of twenty terrestrial empires
and of one spiritual empire, that is Muhammad. As regards all standards
by which human greatness may be measured, we may ask, is there any man
greater than he?

I“f greatness of purpose, smallness of means, and outstanding results
are the three criteria of human genius, who could dare to compare any great
man in modern history with Muhammad? The most famous men created arms,
and empires only. They founded, if any at all, no more than material power
which often crumbled away before their eyes. This man merged not only armies,
legislation, empires, peoples and dynasties but millions of men in one
third of the inhabited world, and more than that, moved the altars, the
gods, the religions, the ideas, the beliefs and the souls on the basis
of a Book, every letter of which has become law. He created a spiritual
nationality of every tongue and of every race.” (Historie de la Turqu,,
Vol. 2, page 76-77)

SIR WILLIAM MUIR

The following description of his person and character is taken from
Sir William Muir (Life of Muhammad, pp. 510-13):

His form, though little above mean height, was stately and commanding.
The depth of feeling in his dark black eyes, and the winning expression
of a face otherwise attractive, gained the confidence and love of strangers,
even at first sight. His features often unbended into a smile full of grace
and condescension. He was, says an admiring follower, the handsomest and
bravest, the brightest faced and most generous of men. It was as though
the sunlight beamed in his countenance. His gait has been likened to that
of one descending a hill rapidly. When he made haste, it was with difficulty
that one kept pace with him. He never turned, even if his mantle caught
in a thorny bush; so that his attendants talked and laughed freely behind
him secure of being unobserved.

Thorough and complete in all his actions, he took in hand no work without
bringing it to a close. The same habit pervaded his manner in social intercourse.
If he turned in a conversation towards a friend, he turned not partially,
but with his full face and his whole body. In shaking hands, he was not
the first to withdraw his own; nor was he the first to break off in converse
with a stranger, nor to turn away his ear. A patriarchal simplicity pervaded
his life. His custom was to do everything for himself. If he gave an alms
he would place it with his own hands in that of the petitioner. He aided
his wives in their household duties, mended his clothes, tied up the goats,
and even cobbled his sandals. His ordinary dress was of plain white cotton
stuff, made like his neighbours'. He never reclined at meals. Muhammad,
with his wives, lived, as we have seen, in a row of low and homely cottages
built of unbaked bricks, the apartments separated by walls of palm branches
rudely daubed with mud, while curtains of leather, or of black haircloth,
supplied the place of doors and windows. He was to all of easy access even
as the river's bank to him that draweth water from it. Embassies and deputations
were received with the utmost courtesy and consideration. In the issue
of rescripts bearing on their representations, or in other matters of state,
Muhammad displayed all the qualifications of an able and experienced ruler.
What renders this the more strange is that he was never known himself to
write.

A remarkable feature was the urbanity and consideration with which Muhammad
treated even the most insignificant of his followers. Modesty and kindliness,
patience, self denial, and generosity, pervaded his conduct, and riveted
the affections of all around him. He disliked to say No. If unable to answer
a petitioner in the affirmative, he preferred silence. He was not known
ever to refuse an invitation to the house even of the meanest, nor to decline
a proffered present however small. He possessed the rare faculty of making
each individual in a company think that he was the favoured guest. If he
met anyone rejoicing at success he would seize him eagerly and cordially
by the hand. With the bereaved and afflicted he sympathised tenderly. Gentle
and unbending towards little children, he would not disdain to accost a
group of them at play with the salutation of peace. He shared his food,
even in times of scarcity, with others, and was sedulously solicitous for
the personal comfort of everyone about him. A kindly and benevolent disposition
pervaded all those illustrations of his character. Muhammad was a faithful
friend. He loved Abu Bakr with the close affection of a brother; Ali, with
the fond partiality of a father. Zaid, the freedman, was so strongly attached
by the kindness of the Prophet, that he preferred to remain at Makkah rather
than return home with his own father. 'I will not leave thee,' he said,
clinging to his patron, 'for thou hast been a father and mother to me.'
The friendship of Muhammad survived the death of Zaid, and his son Usama
was treated by him with distinguished favour for the father's sake. Uthman
and Umar were also the objects of a special attachment; and the enthusiasm
with which, at Hudaibiyya, the Prophet entered into the Pledge of the Tree
and swore that he would defend his beleaguered son in law even to the death,
was a signal proof of faithful friendship. Numerous other instances of
Muhammad's ardent and unwavering regard might be adduced. His affections
were in no instance misplaced; they were ever reciprocated by a warm and
self sacrificing love.

In the exercise of a power absolutely dictatorial, Muhammad was just
and temperate. Nor was he wanting in moderation towards his enemies, when
once they had cheerfully submitted to his claims. The long and obstinate
struggle against his pretentions maintained by the inhabitants of Makkah
might have induced its conqueror to mark his indignation in indelible traces
of fire and blood. But Muhammad, excepting a few criminals, granted a universal
pardon; and, nobly casting into oblivion the memory of the past, with all
its mockery, its affronts and persecution, he treated even the foremost
of his opponents with a gracious and even friendly consideration. Not less
marked was the forbearance shown to Abdullah and the disaffected citizens
of Madinah, who for so many years persistently thwarted his designs and
resisted his authority, nor the clemency with which he received submiss
ive advances of tribes that before had been the most hostile, even in the
hour of victory.

Again he wrote:

It is strongly corroborative of Muhammad's sincerity that the earliest
converts to Islam were not only of upright character, but his own bosom
friends and people of his own household who, intimately acquainted with
his private life could not fail otherwise to have detected those discrepancies
which even more or less exist between the profession of the hypocritical
deceiver abroad and his actions at home".

SIR JOHN GLUBB

Talking about the revelations and dreams of Hadhrat Muhammadsaw
he writes:

Whatever opinion the reader may form when he reaches the end of this
book, it is difficult to deny that the call of Muhammad seems to bear a
striking resemblance to innumerable other accounts of similar visions,
both in the Old and New Testaments, and in the experience of Christian
saints, possibly also of Hindus and devotees of other religions. Such visions,
moreover, have often marked the beginnings of lives of great sanctity and
of heroic virtue.

To attribute such phenomena to self delusion scarcely seems an adequate
explanation, for they have been experienced by many persons divided from
one another by thousands of years of time and by thousands of miles of
distance, who cannot conceivably have even heard of each other. Yet the
accounts which they give of their visions seem to bear an extraordinary
likeness to one another. It scarcely appears reasonable to suggest that
all these visionaries "imagined" such strikingly similar experiences,
although they were quite ignorant of each other's existence.

Talking about the migration of the companions of the Holy Prophet Muhammad,
may peace be upon him, to Abyssinia while the prophet himself was in Makkah,
he writes:

The list seems to have included very nearly all the persons who had
accepted Islam and the Messenger of God must have remained with a much
reduced group of adherents, among the generally hostile inhabitants of
Makkah, a situation which proves him to have possessed a considerable degree
of moral courage and conviction.

Talking about Muhammad's migration from Makkah to Madinah, when he had
to escape like a fugitive whose life was in great danger, he writes:

When the fugitives had whispered goodbye to Abu Bakr's son and daughter
outside the cave on Mount Thaur and the camels had padded silently away
into the darkness beneath the sharp Arabian stars, the curtain rose on
one of the greatest dramas of human history. How little did Caesar or Chosroes,
surrounded by their great armies and engaged in a long and bitter war for
world supremacy (as they thought), realise that four ragged Arabs riding
silently through the bare mountains of the Hejaz were about to inaugurate
a movement which would put an end to both their great imperial dominions.

MONTGOMERY WATT

W. Montgomery Watt, the well known Orientalist, has said the following
about his personality in general (Muhammad at Madinah pp 334-5):

We may distinguish three great gifts Muhammad had, each of which was
indispensable to his total achievement. First, there is what may be called
his gift as a seer. Through him or on the orthodox Muslim view, through
the revelations made through him the Arab world was given an ideological
framework within which the resolution of its social tensions became possible.
The provision of such a framework involved both insight into the fundamental
causes of the social malaise of the time, and the genius to express this
insight in a form which would stir the hearer to the depths of his being.
...........

Secondly, there is Muhammad's wisdom as a statesman. The conceptual
structure found in the Quran was merely a framework. The framework had
to support a building of concrete policies and concrete institutions. In
the course of this book, much has been said of Muhammad's far sighted political
strategy and his social reforms. His wisdom in these matters is shown by
the rapid expansion of a small state to a world empire, and by the adaption
of his social institutions to many different environments and their continuance
for thirteen centuries.

Thirdly, there is his skill and tact as an administrator and his wisdom
in the choice of men to whom to delegate administrative details. Sound
institutions and a sound policy will not go far if the execution of affairs
is faulty and fumbling. When Muhammad died, the state he had founded was
a going concern, able to withstand the shock of his removal and, once it
had recovered from this shock, it expanded at prodigious speed.

The more one reflects on the history of Muhammad and of early Islam,
the more one is amazed at the vastness of his achievement. Circumstances
presented him with an opportunity such as few men have had, but the man
was fully matched with the hour. Had it not been for his gifts as a seer,
statesman, and administrator and, behind these, his trust in God and firm
belief that God had sent him, a notable chapter in the history of mankind
would have remained unwritten. It is my hope that this study of his life
may contribute to a fresh appraisal and appreciation of one of the greatest
of the sons of Adam.

Such is a testimony of a biographer who was not favorably disposed towards
the Holy Prophet.

WILL DURANT

Talking about the immence influence of Muhammad on world history he
wrote:

In the year 565 Justinian died, master of a great empire. Five years
later Muhammad was born into a poor family in a country three quarters
desert, sparsely peopled by nomad tribes whose total wealth could hardly
have furnished the sanctuary of St. Sophia. No one in those years would
have dreamed that within a century these nomads would conquer half of Byzantine
Asia, all Persia and Egypt, most of North Africa, and be on their way to
Spain. The explosion of the Arabian peninsula into the conquest and conversion
of half the Mediterranean world is the most extraordinary phenomenon in
medieval history.

ALFRED GUILLAME

He wrote the following in his book Islam in regards to the battles fought
by the Prophet:

Muhammad accomplished his purpose in the course of three small engagements:
the number of combatants in these never exceeded a few thousand, but in
importance they rank among the world's decisive battles.

REV. BOSWELL SMITH

“Head of the state as well as the Church, he was Caesar and Pope in
one, but he was Pope without the Pope's pretensions, and Caesar without
the legions of Caesar, without a standing army, without a body guard, without
a palace, without a fixed revenue. If ever a man had the right to rule
by a right divine, it was Muhammad for he had all the power without the
instruments and without its supports. (Muhammad and Muhammadanism
)

On the whole, the wonder is not how much but how little, under different
circumstances, Muhammad differed from himself. In the shepherd of the desert,
in the Syrian trader,in the solitary of Mount Hira, in the reformer in
the minority of one, in the exile of Madinah, in the acknowledged conqueror,
in the equal of the Persian Chosroes and the Greek Heraclius, we can still
trace substantial unity. I doubt whether any other man whose external conditions
changed so much, ever himself changed less to meet them.

KAREN ARMSTRONG

A modern research scholar of Islam Karen Armstrong, wrote in her book:

Muhammad had to start virtually from scratch and work his way towards
the radical monotheistic spirituality of his own. When he began his mission,
a dispassionate observer would not have given him a chance. The Arabs,
he might have objected, were just not ready for monotheism: they were not
sufficently developed for this sophisticated vision. In fact, to attempt
to introduce it on a large scale in this violent, terrifying society could
be extremely dangerous and Muhammad would be lucky to escape with his life.

Indeed, Muhammad was frequently in deadly peril and his survival was
a near-miracle. But he did succeed. By the end of his life he had laid
an axe to the root of the chronic cycle tribal violence that afflicted
the region and paganism was no longer a going concern. The Arabs were ready
to embark on a new phase of their history.
(Muhammad - A Biography of the Prophet page 53-54)

Finally it was the West, not Islam, which forbade the open discussion
of religious matters. At the time of the Crusades, Europe seemed obsessed
by a craving for intellectual conformity and punished its deviants with
a zeal that has been unique in the history of religion. The witch-hunts
of the inquisitors and the persecution of Protestants by the Catholics
and vice versa were inspired by abtruse theoligical opinions which in both
Judaism and Islam were seen as private and optional matters. Neither Judaism
nor Islam share the Christian conception of heresy, which raises human
ideas about the divine to an unacceptably high level and almost makes them
a form of idolatry. The period of the Crusades, when the fictional Mahound
was established, was also a time of the great strain and denial in Europe.
This is graphically expressed in the phobia about Islam.
(Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet, page 27).

MAJOR A. LEONARD

If ever any man on this earth has found God; if ever any man has devoted
his life for the sake of God with a pure and holy zeal then, without doubt,
and most certainly that man was the Holy Prophet of Arabia.
(Islam, its Moral and Spiritual Values, p. 9; 1909, London)